The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 133, Ed. 1 Monday, April 4, 1983 Page: 2 of 14
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Monday, April 4, 1983
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY, Normin. Oklahoma
page 2
Police report
rape in Norman
Countdown looking smooth
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‘‘0 risen Christ, in your glorious wounds
accept all the throbbing wounds of the men
and women of today: the wounds of which are
so much talked about in the media,” said the
pope
"We are with you, all the victims of terror,
locked up in prisons or concentration camps,
consumed by ill-treatment or by torture; we
are with you who have been kidnapped”
He also prayed for victims of natural vio-
lence, including “the people of the ancient
city of Popayan,” the Colombian mountain
city where more than 230 people died in an
earthquake on Holy Thursday.
In Jerusalem, police said Palestinians threw
stones on the Via Dolorosa, the route revered
as the path Jesus took to his crucifixion. The
stone-throwing was viewed as marking a
shooting spree last Easter by a deranged Jew
at the Moslem Dome of the Rock
\t the shrine itself, known to Jews as the
Temple Mount, Rabbi Meir Kahane tried to
lead in prayer about 50 Jewish extremist fol-
lowers of his right-wing movement Kach Po-
lice let them pray at the gate but blocked their
entry into the walled compound
Despite (he tension, Israeli soldiers kept
their presence low in the Old City section of
Jerusalem There were no armed soldiers on
rooftops or mingling w ith pilgrims as in previ-
ous Easters
YOU) WITH QI JU R PROMOIIONS
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| April 10. 1983
[mkJ
Published Monday through Friday 'except for the following
University holidays 8/3-18 9/6.10/11.11/24-26.12/15-31.1/3-11,
3/14-18 520 5/23-25 5/27. 5/30-31 & 7/4) plus the following
Saturdays 9/11 & 25.10/23.11 /64 1344/16
USPS No 406-540 ISSN No. 0030-171X
POSTMASTER Please send change of address Form 3579 to The
Oklahoma Daily 860 Van Vleet Oval Norman. OK 73079
The Oklahoma Daily is published by the Publications Board of
the University of Oklahoma as a student newspaper serving the
University Community
Views expressed in articles in The Oklahoma Daily are those
of The Oklahoma Daily news staff and contributors Opinions do
not necessarily represent views of OU students faculty, staff or
admisistrators
The Ok'ahoma Daily was founded in 1914 It is a member of the
Associated Press, United Press International, Associated Col-
legiate Press and the Oklahoma Press Association This publica-
tion, printed by the Journalism Press, is issued by The Universi-
ty of Oklahoma and authorized by Fred Weddle Director of Stu-
dent Publications 13.500 copies have been prepared and
distributed at no cost to the taxpayers of Oklahoma At an
average cost of $2 900 The Oklahoma Daily is financed through
the sale of advertising and subscriptions
This institution, in compliance with the Titles VI and VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972 Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Section 402 of
the Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974 and other Federal
laws and regulations does not discriminate on the basis of race,
color, origin, sex. age. religion, handicap, or status as a veteran,
m any of its policies practices or procedures This includes, but
is not limited to admissions, employment, financial aid. and
educational services
Subscription Price $25 per year The Oklahoma Daily is
entered as second class postage paid at Norman, Oklahoma
73070
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Patiy Pics
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ROCKFISH GAP. Va. t \P) Ymtrak’s Southern
Crescent passenger train carrying more than 300 pas-
sengers hit a mudslide in a gorge in western Virginia
and jumped the tracks Sunday, injuring 22 people,
officials and witnesses said
Steve Urban, operations supervisor for Amtrak in
Washington, D C , said at least 10 railroad employees
were among those who suffered minor injuries when
the train, en route from New Orleans to New York,
derailed shortly before 6 a m
The two diesel units pulling the 13-car train and the
six cars immediately behind them jumped the tracks,
said Bruce Heard, an \mtrak spokesman He said the
locomotives and the baggage car toppled onto their
sides
“The five other cars which derailed are upright but
leaning," he said
The train, with 321 passengers listed on its manifest,
left New Orleans at 7: U) a m Saturday and was due in
Norman police reported a rape occured in Norman
Sunday morning
The victim, and 18-year-old female reported she had
been offered a ride home from a local club at J a m.
Police reported three suspects stopped while driving
the victim home, assaulted and raped her
Police desribed the first suspect as Caucasian male,
22-23 years old, 170 pounds, medium build with medi-
um length brown hair
The second suspect is described as 5’ 9" tall with
brow n hair
The third suspect is a Caucasian male, 22-23 years
old, 5' 8" tall, medium build with blonde hair and a
thin moustache
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I "K (OTMATTING AND FRAMING
o L
Tracks covered with mud
Amtrak train derails
W ashington at 8:55 a m. Sunday, Heard said
It derailed on Southern Railway tracks in a “very
remote area” about 24 miles south of I harlottesville,
Heard said
\mtrak officials from Washington and investiga-
tors for the National Transportation Safety Board
were sent to the site and Heard said the cause of the
derailment was not yet known
But witnesses said the train derailed alter slamming
into a mudslide in a narrow gorge.
State Sen Thomas I Michie Jr , who was traveling
Speech mourns victim
t.AP) Pope John Paul H’s Easter message
to the world mourned the “throbbing wounds
of the men and women” who suffer from
terrorism, while in the cradle of Christianity
scattered Arab demonstrations broke the
peace of paschal celebrations Sunday
U.S Marines in Beirut attended a sunrise
praser service by Roman Catholic and Protes-
tant chaplains before resuming armed patrols.
In Moscow, at a Mass for parishioners and
foreigners, the congregation was urged to
avoid “nuclear frenzy,” said Tass, the official
Soviet news agency, which reported on vari-
ous celebrations to its international subscrib-
ers but not to the Soviet people.
In Faslane, Scotland, more than 2,000 pro-
testers carried daffodils to a submarine base
as part of a four-day Easter campaign across
Britain to decry the planned stationing of
nuclear missiles.
The demonstrators’ counterparts in West
Germans estimated at 200,000 strong
carried crosses and ate Easter eggs they said
were given them by friendly police and towns-
folk at anti nuclear rallies in dozens of cities
The voice of the 62-year old pope was
strong and clear as it echoed across St Peter's
Square, filled by 250,000 worshippers and
tourists for the climax of the Roman Catholic
Holy Week the celebration of the Biblical
resurrection of Jesus.
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C\PE CANAVERAL, Fla. t AP) After months
of troubles that stopped Ymerica’s manned space pro-
gram in its expensive tracks, the space shuttle Chal-
lenger eased through NASA’s smoothest countdown
ever toward its fiery first launching Monday
Everything looked favorable for a 1:30 p.m EST
liftoff the weather, the ship and its four astronauts.
The Air Force sent up balloons Sunday to measure
high-altitude winds that had threatened and found that
the winds were mov ing out of the area.
Space agency officials gave launch pad workers
Easter off, and the Challenger crew joined their fam-
ilies for lunch
In the afternoon of a warm Florida Sunday, the
astronauts took T-38 jet trainers into the cloud free
skies and did aerobatics to accustom their bodies for
the five days in space ahead
Paul W eitz, 50, a retired Navy captain and com-
mander of the flight, is the only one of the astronauts
who has been in space before He was the pilot on the
first Sky lab in 1973.
Pilot on this flight will be Karol Bobko, 45, a
colonel in the Nir Force; the mission specialists are
Story Musgrave, 47 a surgeon before he became an
astronaut and still practicing and Donald Peterson,
a retired \ir Force colonel
They had a 6 30 pm. bedtime and the schedule
allowed them to sleep until after 9 a m on launch day,
if they chose
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from Birmingham, \la.. to Charlottesville, said the
mudslide had covered the tracks
“The first thing I felt was the engineer applying the
brakes very drastically ,” said Michie, who was in the
lead passenger car “It was a second or two later when
you could feel the car leaving the rails. It all happened
so fast
“We tilled a little bit The first four or five cars
squeezed together like an accordion and jacknifed ”
Michie said there was no panic aboard the train and
he didn’t see anyone who appeared to be seriously
. injured
“Almost everybody was asleep which was just as
well," he said
C PER
"This is probably the smoothest countdown I have
been involved with in 20 years,” test director Norman
Carlson said Sunday morning..
The clocks that mark liftoff were stopped at 11
hours and thousands of workers got 24 hours off.
Only 200-250 people, the number necessary to make
keep sy stems ready, were on the pad.
The count was to resume at 12:10 a m. Five hours
later workmen were to beg'in filling the ship’s peach-
colored external tank with 383,000 gallons of liquid
hydrogen and 141,000 gallons of liquid oxygen
The first day in space will be longer than any on the
five missions of Columbia, the first operational
shuttle.
At 11:31 pm. EST Monday, when Challenger is
1,400 miles east of Rio de Janeiro, Musgrave and
Peterson will release the world’s largest communica-
tions satellite from the cargo bay The shuttle will
remain in the vicinity until an hour later when a rocket
propels the satellite to its orbit 22,300 miles high over
Brazil.
The deployment of the Tracking and Data Relay
Satellite a 2'/’-ton spacecraft measuring 57 feet
across when its two huge antennas are extended is
the main task of Challenger’s first mission.
On Thursday , however, comes another highlight
a 3'/z hour spacewalk by Musgrave and Peterson
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Webb, Todd. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 133, Ed. 1 Monday, April 4, 1983, newspaper, April 4, 1983; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1821593/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.